Maisie wouldn’t take her rightful place in the throne at several events across the state until later in the day as her dad jam packed his day with the Cup; which included a brief round of golf – like 30 minutes brief.

The biggest parts of the Bonino family’s day centered around a good meal, visiting the place where his hockey career really took off, and giving back.

“His grandparents are probably Nick’s biggest fans,” Lauren [Bonino’s wife] said. “Poppa calls Nick before every single game. He leaves him a voicemail.”

Joanne’s dad, Jim Orsini, is 93. Her mom, Nina, is 90. Nina broke her hip and is doing well in rehab, so the feast would have to go to her. Nick cooked the pasta, Joanne said. Tuna fish with angel hair, Steve said. Yes, Lauren said, it is Nana’s secret tuna fish pasta.

They brought it to The Reservoir in West Hartford. Mr. and Mrs. Orsini: Dinner for two, compliments of Lord Stanley.

“I think that’s the one memory I will cherish the most,” Bonino said. “My Nana and Poppa kissing the Cup and eating pasta out of it is something I will never forget.”

Following lunch and Nick’s brief round of golf, the Bonino family headed to Avon Old Farms School, the alma mater of the Penguins’ forward.

Now it was time for the seemingly always relaxed Maisie Bonino to take her seat inside the chalice in front of the masses.

Somewhere between 4,000 to 5,000 people showed up at Avon Old Farms to get their picture with Bonino and the Cup.

A donation box was set up to collect funds for the Connecticut Children’s Medical Center prior to fans reaching Bonino and the Cup. According to ESPN, after two hours the donations reached an estimated $5,000.

The staggering amount of people left Bonino on a tight time schedule. He had to improvise with hundreds of fans left in line. He grabbed the Cup and walked next to the line so everyone could take a look as he left.

Bonino’s last major stop of the day was at the Connecticut Children’s Medical Center of which he was collecting donations for at Avon.

The Cup, Bonino and his crew were carted around all day by the ride service Uber. Bonino and the company partnered together to present the medical center with a $10,000 donation. Maisie posed again in the Cup for a picture with the customary giant check.

“[Visiting the medical center] was one of his main plans,” Bonino’s father, Steve, said. “It’s hockey players, all of the athletes, they all do it. But this is special. You look at this as a parent and you’re like, wow, I guess you did something right.

“He’s a humble kid. He’s a good kid. We have a daughter, they’re just great kids. But this, this just warms your heart.”

[…]

“Having a child and doing visits to children’s hospitals with the Penguins and with the [Vancouver] Canucks and with the [Anaheim] Ducks, it’s eye-opening,” [Nick Bonino] said. “It definitely changes the way you look at life, those kids in there haven’t had the best fortune, but you wouldn’t know it by their demeanors, by the way they act. Especially with Maisie, I knew this platform was the way to maybe raise some money.”

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Ian Cole took the Cup home to Ann Arbor, Michigan. Like Bonino and many of his teammates before him, made one of his main stops of the day at a children’s hospital.

At the C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital, he was greeted by a Storm Trooper named Blasty; who rocks the colors and logo of the University of Michigan. (No word as to if that is Jim Harbaugh underneath the uniform. We’re just going to assume it is.)

He writes about interactions at the hospital show just how awesome seeing the Stanley Cup is for a puck head – even if it is a player from a team that’s not your favorite that brings it to you.

He held Owen Saba, a 5-month-old who was going home Friday after a 40-day stay for open-heart surgery, as the baby’s father, Fareed, a Blackhawks fan, snapped pictures of the baby and the Blackhawks’ names on the Cup.

Spending the day with Ian Cole and the Stanley Cup in Ann Arbor, Mich. First stop: Mott Children’s Hospital. pic.twitter.com/srb65lKT3b

He spun the Cup around like a top for Travis Rathman, a 20-year-old having surgery for fluid on the brain. Rathman was at Joe Louis Arena when the Detroit Red Wings won the Stanley Cup in 2002. So Cole showed him where the 2001-02 Red Wings’ names were engraved and where the 2015-16 Penguins would be.

“Did you get photos?” Rathman asked his attendant. “Did you get photos?”

“Yes,” the attendant said. “I got, like, 10.”

Like Bonino’s father, Cole’s mother reflected on the good human her son had become. From Cotsonika:

Cole’s mother, Connie, wore his Penguins sweater to the Ice Cube. Her eyes were red with emotion, not just for her son winning the Cup, but for what he did with it.

“When he was a little kid, I just told him always that God gave you a gift, and if you work hard with it, your dreams can come true — and he gave you a gift to use it well after your dream comes true, to pass it forward,” she said. “So I’m proud of him as a human being and as an athlete.

“So, yeah. Amazing stuff.”

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Thus far in the Penguins celebrations with the Cup, Bryan Rust wins for best pictures.